Battle cry of the U.S. Marine Corps / MON 12-29-25 / 1996 #1 hit for the Spice Girls / Where Shrek lives / Tin Man's need
Monday, December 29, 2025
Constructor: Chase Dittrich
Relative difficulty: Challenging (solving Downs-only—a nearly impossible Downs-only solve for me, because of one "word")
Theme answers:
- WORKS FOR PEANUTS (17A: Is severely underpaid)
- RECORD LABEL (27A: Motown or RCA)
- JURY BOX (39A: Seating area for 12 peers)
- BOOKS ON TAPE (47A: Works that are heard rather than read)
Oorah is a battle cry common in the United States Marine Corps since the mid-20th century.
Several anecdotes attributed the phrase to John R. Massaro's time as a gunnery sergeant in the Reconnaissance Company, 1st Marine Division, in the mid-1950s. Massaro (who later became sergeant major of the Marine Corps) and other Marines who trained aboard the submarine USS Perch, beginning in 1949, used oorah in imitation of the vessel's klaxon horn (which sounded like arrugha). Others have attributed the phrase's popularization to Massaro's subsequent time at Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego, where use of the word spread.
Massaro has said that he did not originate the word (saying in 2015: "It was a phrase or a term originally coming from boarding a ship") and that the word was already in use in 1949. (wikipedia)
When I saw PEANUTS at the end of one of the themers, I was kinda hoping there'd be a comic strip theme today, but alas, no. Just ... parts of a package. It's a pretty dull concept, but it might've at least had some seasonal relevance if it had run before 12/25. Running it on the Monday after Christmas... again, inexplicable. OORAH wasn't my only struggle point today, just the most nearly fatal one. You can see from this snapshot of my Downs-only solve (taken mid-solve) that I was having real trouble getting the grid to coalesce:
- 9A: Where Shrek lives (SWAMP) — if I'd been looking at Across clues, I wouldn't have known what to do with this clue. I think I saw one of the Shrek movies once, whenever it originally came out. If I ever read the William Steig book, I forgot the plot. I would've been looking for a specific place here, like CAIRO or MIAMI or OWEGO (winking at my fellow central New Yorkers here).
- 35A: Stephen of "V for Vendetta" (REA) — crosswords have made this guy more famous than movies ever did. See also singer Chris REA (see video, above). I guess either one is better than [Mens ___], but not by much. Looks like REA also (rarely) gets clued as part of FDR's New Deal Alphabet Soup (in this case, the Rural Electrification Act). When you go back to pre-Shortz puzzles, REA clues descend into chaos. [Penn Station builder]? [John ___ Neill, "Oz" illustrator]!? At one point the most popular REA was [Cartoonist Gardner ___]. Looks like he was an "old New Yorker cartoonist," per the last time he was in the puzzle (1999). Wait, there's also [___ Irvin, who designed the first cover for the New Yorker] (what is with the name REA and cartoonist/illustrators!?!?). Also (once), [Peggy of "The Dukes of Hazzard"] (!??!?!). But mostly, since I've been solving, it's been Stephen ___ and Mens ___.
- 45A: Tin Man's need (OIL) — saw this just now for the first time (since it's an Across clue) and thought, "a HEART!"
- 10D: 1996 #1 hit for the Spice Girls ("WANNABE") — if OORAH didn't get you, Downs-only solvers, then "WANNABE" might have. I was humming the damn song in my head but couldn't remember the name. "Oh, yeah, it's the tell me what you want, what you really really want song! ... 'TELL ME?'"
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| [Thanks, Graeme!] |
Doc the Jack Russell has moved on to Doggie Heaven. Here now is a live shot of Doggie Heaven. Seems pretty nice. They got martinis and everything.
| [Thanks, Barb & Alan] |
Another memorial photo, this one of Perla, who is just as good as any "present," better even. Unwrap Perla next!
| [Thanks, Steve!] |
Senior cat Georgette is enjoying her second Christmas in her new home. It's tough when your original owner dies, but Georgette seems to have gotten herself into a pretty sweet situation. Loving humans, tuna treats on demand. Could be worse.
| [Thanks, John!] |
And finally Tostada, I repeat Tostada. Tostada, everybody. It's Tostada. How is this animal real!? A wide-faced puffy ball of sleep. Cuteness personified. Ailurophobe healer. Mythical miniature yeti cat of the central west mountainscape. Voracious hunter, lethal cuddler. Tostada!
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| [Thanks, Barbara!] |
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